Inclusive Learning and Educational Equity 5
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EXPER
T LEARNER Self-determination theory Self-regulated learning theory Cognitive neuroscience theory Social cognitive learning theory Constructivistic learning theories Fig. 2.1 Theoretical background for the development of expert learners 2 The Goal of the Universal Design for Learning: Development of All to Expert… 38 strengths and limitations, and where the error was made during the task. It helps them to manage their learning as well, initiating opportunities to learn, setting per- sonal learning goals based upon their own needs, skills, and interests, selecting the most effective learning strategies, evaluating the effectiveness of selected learning strategies, modifying the learning goal or action plan, and adapting their behavior to learning situations. They are more skilled in self-reflection and reflect on their learning more often, evaluating their progress, and attributing successes to their competencies and failures to correctable causes. Expert learners are characterized by solid self-regulation due to good metacognitive skills and strong resilience and persistence when facing barriers to learning. Their ability to learn independently is better developed, and they manifest creativity and curiosity more often. More often and on purpose, expert learners take responsibility for their learning because they understand how they learn and manage their education. Accountability and the opportunity to choose are related. Expert learners are looking for meaningful learning choices and enjoy every possibility to decide for themselves. Since they know their learning needs and interests, dispositions, and capacities, it is easy for them to watch over their choices’ positive and negative consequences. Along these lines, they realize themselves as active agents in the learning process, get a voice in their learning, and develop a sense of ownership in the learning process. When expert learners can make the choices, they tend to feel more responsible for their learning. Expert learners do not give up so quickly when confronted with obstacles and distractions but try to find novel and effective ways of resolving the situation. Perkins ( 2014 ) offered a list of personal and interpersonal skills and knowledge worth developing in the twenty-first century and showed us that expert learners recognize that their initial understanding is likely to be incorrect or too simple, motivating them to watch out for solutions. Expert learners are more aware of themselves as learners knowing their strengths and areas for improvement. So, they are more adaptive because they do self- monitoring while learning and have more learning strategies from which to choose. Expert learners are more sensitive to task requirements due to greater metacogni- tive awareness. They can predict quite accurately which tasks are challenging and which are not. Expert learners more clearly comprehend why they fail and use the metacognitive awareness check for errors and redirect actions to attain a better solu- tion. The most important questions they ask themselves are: How do we learn? How do we know that we have learned? How to direct our future learning? The Dunning- Kruger effect (illusory superiority) does not work on expert learners who are rela- tively independent monitors of the task performance and usually do not overestimate their abilities. That difference points to a meaningful distinction of expert learn- ers—well-developed metacognitive awareness. It is important to note that expert learners customary have high-quality teachers who are partners in learning (Auerbach et al., 2018 ). They seek support from teach- ers and listen to advice, though they make their own decisions. It is probably clear without specific study that even expert learners need help to improve their learning. Seeking to provide insights into the development of expert learners, understand- ing the dissimilarities of their inner qualities is necessary. Analysis of expert J. Navaitien ė and E. Stasiūnaitienė 39 learners’ differences could be very fruitful to determine the direction of actions for teachers who seek to develop the expert learners. Comparison of expert learners and learners in their way to expertise is valuable for giving specific guidelines for self- development of learners. Knowing what distinguishes expert learners from their classmates can help the teachers appropriately respond to the diversity of all learn- ers. We write about dissimilarities of expert learners not because we do not believe that all learners can become experts, but because we aim to reveal how successful their learning learners look. Scientists have long been trying to find out what characteristics are inherent for expert learners. Glaser and Chi ( 1988 ) listed and described seven key characteristics of experts: they excel mainly in their sphere; perceive large, meaningful problems in their sphere; are fast in performing the skills in their sphere; have superior short- term and long-term memory; see and represent a problem in the deeper level; spend a great deal of time analysing the problem; and have strong self-monitoring skills. Ericsson and Smith ( 1991 ) reviewed a broad range of approaches to the structure of expertise and expert performance. These authors highlighted the experts’ ability to evaluate their performance and explain the reasons for setbacks. Weinstein and Van Mater Stone ( 1993 ) affirm that general education models come from conceptions of expert performance. However, teachers believe that an expert just knew more about something. They have summarized the five characteristics of experts: knowing more, organized and integrated, having effective and efficient strategies for access- ing and using knowledge, having different motivations for acquiring and using knowledge, and having self-regulation. Ertmer and Newby ( 1996 ) characterized expert learners as strategic, self-regulated, and reflective. They recognized the reflection on learning to be an essential ingredient in the development of expert learners. These authors presented expert learners as strategic strategy users who use the gained knowledge in real-life situations and seek to achieve desired learning goals by selecting, controlling, and monitoring different learning strategies. Expert learners control the processes necessary for successful learning through self- control. The components of self-regulation are creating plans, monitoring their implementa- tion, and evaluating the results achieved. Zimmerman ( 2000 ) described the charac- teristics of good self-regulated learners to reveal in what way naïve learners differ from expert learners and highlighted planning, organization, self-observation, and self-evaluation. Bransford et al. ( 2000 ) defined expertise as a continuum that runs from novice to expert. They presented the characteristics of expert learners based on key scientific findings that have come from the study of people who have developed expertise. The authors stated that expertise should not be associated with intellec- tual level or some characteristics of the memory. The expert learners have extensive, relevant, well-organized, and grounded foundational concepts knowledge to support their learning and improve understanding. Two types of expert learners were distin- guished: adaptive and routine expert learners. Adaptive ones can transfer knowledge from one domain to another when conditions change, whereas routine expert learn- ers function merely in standard conditions. According to Bransford et al. ( 2000 ), expert learners notice important aspects of information, understand the subjects deeply, analyze the context of applicability, and put little attentional effort. Sternberg 2 The Goal of the Universal Design for Learning: Development of All to Expert… 40 ( 2003 ) reviewed the expert learners’ characteristics based on the theory of success- ful intelligence. Regretting the fact that many learners fail to learn up to their poten- tial, the author indicated three kinds of expert learner-specific abilities: (1) analytical ability, which provides the expert learners with the opportunity to analyze, critique, judge, compare and contrast, evaluate, and assess; (2) creative ability which helps the expert learners to create, invent, discover, imagine if, suppose that, and predict; (3) practical ability which is needed for the expert learners to apply, use, put into practice, implement, employ, and render practical. According to the author, analyti- cal abilities are necessary for an expert learner to determine whether ideas are good, creative abilities to generate ideas, and practical abilities to implement these ideas in practice. Chi ( 2006 ) analyzed two approaches to experts’ characteristics: a funda- mental approach to expertise as arising from chance or inner talent and a compara- tive approach as a level of proficiency that everyone can achieve. This author highlighted seven major ways in which experts excel: generating the best, fast, and accurate solution in solving a problem or designing tasks; perceiving the deep struc- ture of a problem or situation; analyzing the problem qualitatively; having self- monitoring skills; choosing the appropriate strategy; being opportunistic when using resources; and retrieving knowledge and strategies with minimal cognitive effort. Woolfolk ( 2008 ) revealed three characteristics of expert learners: they focus their attention on materials learned, give the effort to process the information deeply, and take responsibility for their learning. Rahman et al. ( 2010 ) pointed out one of the important characteristics of expert learners: controlling their learning through meta-attention and meta-comprehension. These authors clarified expert learners as having a specific goal at the beginning of the lesson to help them focus and, conse- quently, monitor and evaluate their learning outcomes. According to Wild and Heck ( 2011 ), expert learners have three main characteristics: they actively engage with the learning material, take responsibility for their learning, and practice self- regulated learning by motivating themselves and guiding their learning. Stobart ( 2014 ) looked into six characteristics of expert learners: they develop their skills, want to be successful, apply knowledge in practice, organize information by creat- ing models, look for feedback to improve their learning, and improve self- regulation. Meyer et al. ( 2014 ) described expert learners as purposeful, motivated, resourceful, knowledgeable, strategic, and goal-directed. Bray and McClaskey ( 2016 ) described how expert learners (learners with agency) develop and detected some of their char- acteristics. They understand how to manage their learning environment, know where to look for resources, know who to connect to their learning networks so they can collaborate and consult in any learning situation, and know-how to learn from their mistakes and develop a new understanding. Persky and Robinson ( 2017 ) named inner motivation and self-regulation as necessary characteristics of the expert learners who focused on mastery, increasing knowledge base, constantly practicing, being open to new experiences, and persisting toward a learning goal. Williams et al. ( 2017 ) focused on perceptual–cognitive expertise. They stressed that expert learners recognize and use task-relevant information provided by classmates or teachers, use probabilities and expectations in different situations, and focus on application. J. Navaitien ė and E. Stasiūnaitienė 41 McDowell ( 2019 ) attempted to identify the knowledge and skills learners must develop to become experts. They defined expert learners as persons who apply their knowledge and skills in various situations to solve problems and use orientation, activation, and collaboration skills to take control and improve their learning. According to this author, expert learners measure their knowledge and adapt learn- ing strategies. They measure their performance, determine the following steps, reflect on their progress, and identify strategies to improve. They also visualize their understanding and give or receive feedback to improve learning for themselves, classmates, and teachers. Darling-Hammond et al. ( 2020 ) emphasized the need to develop twenty-first century skills, which include: – Critical thinking and problem-solving skills – Capacity to find, analyze, synthesize, and apply knowledge to novel situations – Interpersonal skills that allow people to work with others and engage effectively in cross-cultural contexts – Self-directional abilities that enable them to manage their work and complex projects – Capabilities to competently find resources and use tools – Capacity to communicate effectively in many ways – Strong self-regulation – Executive functioning – Metacognitive skills – Resourcefulness, perseverance, and resilience in the face of obstacles and uncertainty – Ability to learn independently; and curiosity, inventiveness, and creativity This list of skills forms the belief that twenty-first-century learners are remark- ably like expert learners as they have comparable abilities and qualities. It is impossible to provide one single list of universal characteristics which can define an expert learner across all contexts and cultures. Current knowledge about neuroplasticity and the growth mindset directed our attention back to the universal design for learning and the qualities of an expert learner aligned with UDL guidelines. Download 5.65 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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